Authoring Lower Difficulties | mari@macintosh.garden


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(Please note that this is an unfinished draft from my notes. I'm posting it as-is because I'm unlikely to finish it any time soon, and unfinished online is better than not online at all. There's no images, and while I tried to finish it with some pointers from memory and studying my old charts for what I did, I likely forgot a bunch of edge cases. This is a good starting point, nothing more.)

Lower difficulties on guitar and bass tend to either confuse or bore charters, and for good reason. They're intentional undercharts, boring to play, boring to chart. Right?

Wrong. Lower difficulties are not only necessary for a good, game-quality chart, but GH2 will crash on lower difficulty chart load without at least some notes on those lower tracks. I have friends who are curious about GH, but are by no means Expert players. No lower difficulties mean they can't play, and that's not fair.

So where do you begin with reductions? Here's some good starting points.

The gist of lower difficulties

The best way to look at authoring lower difficulties is by imagining the riff played by novice real guitar players. Think about the details that they'd leave out, depending on their skill level:

A good example would be how three different novice players might play Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit":

You'll want to replicate this feeling for your lower difficulties. Hard is an easier Expert with fewer flourishes and without three note chords, Medium is the skeleton of the guitar part, recognizable as the real rhythm but without any frills and only over four buttons, and Easy is a chordless three button version of the most basic rhythm of the part.

One final note: it's good to simplify sequentially. Chart your Expert part, then copy down to Hard, simplify, copy down to Medium, simplify, then copy down to Easy and simplify. Obviously, anything not played on a higher difficulty will not be played on a lower difficulty.

Simplifying for Hard

Always remove:

Maybe remove:

Simplifying for Medium

Always remove:

Maybe remove:

Simplifying for Easy

Always remove:

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